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| Grazing rye green manure | 
I have tried many different green manures.  Several of the allotmenteers  around my allotment first decided to go for grazing rye.  It was  expensive but it did the job very well.  If I have the choice I will use  grazing rye more than anything else.  It produces a lot of leaves and a  great mass of fibrous roots.  The one drawback, if you can call it that,  is that it does not fix nitrogen from the air (or I should say doesn't  have Rhizobium bacteria).  
The legumes have these bacteria and fix nitrogen from the air producing  nutrients, if the whole plant is dug in.  30% of the fixed nitrogen is  in the root and 60% is in the stem and leaves.  Where the  other 10%  goes I don't know.  So in the legumes, I have used tares, lupins and am  now using field beans.
I use ordinary lawn grass seed as a  green manure and, although this is not quite as good as grazing rye, it is a fairly good second  choice.
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| Caliente Mustard Green Manure | 
I have also used ordinary mustard and Caliente mustard.  Caliente  mustard is supposed to have pesticidal properties if you cut it up when  digging it in.  Mustard is great for covering a large area with weed  suppressing green manure.  It can be grown in the summer after things  like potatoes and onions have been cropped.  I have not tried any other  of the normal green manures but sometimes, if I have any seed left over,  I will just sow this to be dug in in the spring.  
 The season for planting green manures is well past, although I was thinking of putting broad beans in the brassicae  bed and hoping that they would produce something before I put the  cabbage out in May/June time but I doubt very much if that would be  successful.
Green manures will go in on any ground where crops have been harvested.
 
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